The Sunday Post (Inverness)

New boss Kevin wants to be judged on ability

- By Alan Temple SPORT@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Kevin Harper wants to be judged on his abilities as a manager – not the colour of his skin. However, the new Albion Rovers boss will not shy away from the significan­ce of his appointmen­t as he seeks to blaze a trail for nonwhite coaches in Scottish football.

Harper, 42, is the only BAME (Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic) manager currently working in the SPFL, ending a dearth of diversity that stretches back to the Brazilian Marcio Maximo’s departure from Livingston in 2003. Former Celtic boss John Barnes and the Frenchman Claude Anelka are the only other black men to have held the top jobs in the Scottish game, with the latter effectivel­y installing himself at Raith Rovers.

Harper’s own ascent to the dugout, despite a playing pedigree including spells with Hibs, Portsmouth and Stoke, has been a challengin­g one.

“It’s been more than 15 years since there was a black or minority manager in Scottish football. Maximo at Livingston was the last,” said Harper.

“I can speak from my own experience. I applied for 40 jobs and only got three replies even acknowledg­ing me.

“The rest just ignored me and Albion Rovers were the only team to invite me for an interview.

“After being ignored the first 10 times, I could have just given up. “I’m sure there are plenty of aspiring minority coaches who feel disillusio­ned and think it will never happen. It would be hard to blame them.

“I never, ever wanted a job because of the colour of my skin but, looking at my CV – certainly as a player – I’d like to think I had earned the chance to go and have a conversati­on and put across my ideas as a manager. That wasn’t happening.”

Statistics reported in 2016 showed that, of the 10,000 registered Scottish FA coaches, around 6% – 600 individual­s – fell into the category of “non-white”. However, Harper believes opportunit­ies for minorities in the senior ranks have been slow to arrive.

“There’s no getting away from the fact that having a black manager in the dugout will be a rare phenomenon,” Harper continued.

“It’s a shame that is the case, but in all my time trying to get into coaching, that has always been the case.

“If, by me getting the Albion Rovers job, any young black coaches – or black players thinking of going down that path – think: ‘Well, there is a road into management in Scotland’, then that’s brilliant and something I’d be proud of.”

 ??  ?? A young Kevin Harper in internatio­nal action
A young Kevin Harper in internatio­nal action

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